views:

72

answers:

2

Uploadify is a jQuery plugin that allows the easy integration of a multiple (or single) file uploads on your website. It requires Flash and any backend development language. An array of options allow for full customization for advanced users, but basic implementation is so easy that even coding novices can do it.

I wanted to ask if It is possible to sends out a link of a file that has just been uploaded wioth the e-mail notification of Uploadify.

Here is the code for uploadify.php :

<?php
if (!empty($_FILES)) {
    $tempFile = $_FILES['Filedata']['tmp_name'];
    $targetPath = $_SERVER['DOCUMENT_ROOT'] . $_REQUEST['folder'] . '/';
    $targetFile =  str_replace('//','/',$targetPath) . $_FILES['Filedata']['name'];

    // $fileTypes  = str_replace('*.','',$_REQUEST['fileext']);
    // $fileTypes  = str_replace(';','|',$fileTypes);
    // $typesArray = split('\|',$fileTypes);
    // $fileParts  = pathinfo($_FILES['Filedata']['name']);

    // if (in_array($fileParts['extension'],$typesArray)) {
        // Uncomment the following line if you want to make the directory if it doesn't exist
        // mkdir(str_replace('//','/',$targetPath), 0755, true);

        move_uploaded_file($tempFile,$targetFile);
        echo "1";
    // } else {
    //  echo 'Invalid file type.';
    // }
}

//define the receiver of the email
$to = '[email protected]';
//define the subject of the email
$subject = 'Test email';
//define the message to be sent. Each line should be separated with \n
$message = "Hello World!\n\nThis is my first mail.";
//define the headers we want passed. Note that they are separated with \r\n
$headers = "From: [email protected]\r\nReply-To: [email protected]";
//send the email
$mail_sent = @mail( $to, $subject, $message, $headers );
//if the message is sent successfully print "Mail sent". Otherwise print "Mail failed" 
echo $mail_sent ? "Mail sent" : "Mail failed";
?>
A: 
timdev
yes something like that but how do I implement it I really am not good in PHP
kwek-kwek
Sorry. I'm not going to code a complete solution for you! My hint ought to point you in the right direction!
timdev
understood... thank you
kwek-kwek
A: 

Your script is vulnerable to filename collisions. You're the uploaded using the original name provided by the user. If the same filename is used more than once, you'll overwrite previous versions with the new one.

As well, you're blindly using a form value to specify a location to store the upload. What happens if someone specifies "../../../../../../../../../etc" for the folder and "passwd" for the filename? Or on a Windows server "../../../../../../../../windows/system32" and "ntoskrnl.exe"? If the webserver's misconfigured as to what user ID it's running on, you've just opened the machine to a complete remote compromise. But even if they don't want to compromise the system, they'll be able to trash any file within your site's document root with ease.

Having said that, if you want to embed a link to directly download the file, you'll have to build an HTML-formatted email, or hope the mail client can auto-linkify text that looks like URLs. Building HTML mails for use with the mail() function is a serious pain. I use PHPMailer for my projects. It works nicely and allows you to build any kind of email you'd like.

Marc B